Articles

Study guides, historical commentary, and theological reflection on the Lutheran Confession.

lutheranPortrait of Martin Luther the man behind the Lutheran Confession

Martin Luther: The Man Behind the Lutheran Confession

Martin Luther was an Augustinian monk, a university professor, and a pastor who became the most consequential figure of the Protestant Reformation. His convictions — forged in the monastery, tested at Worms, and expressed in the catechisms — shaped every document in the Book of Concord.

Rev. C•D•F• Warrington, M.Div.

By Rev. C•D•F• Warrington, M.Div.

Ordained Minister, M.Div.

Date

April 11, 2026

lutheranDiet of Augsburg 1530 — Lutherans standing before Holy Roman Emperor Charles V

The Diet of Augsburg (1530): When Lutherans Stood Before the Emperor

On June 25, 1530, Philip Melanchthon's Augsburg Confession was read aloud before Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. It was one of the most consequential moments in church history — Lutheranism's formal declaration of faith to the world.

Rev. C•D•F• Warrington, M.Div.

By Rev. C•D•F• Warrington, M.Div.

Ordained Minister, M.Div.

Date

April 4, 2026

lutheranGrace alone sola gratia — the theological heart of the Lutheran Confession

Grace Alone: The Theological Heart of the Lutheran Confession

Sola gratia — grace alone — is the beating heart of the Lutheran Confession. The Book of Concord insists that salvation is entirely God's work, not a cooperation between divine grace and human effort. This article traces how that conviction shapes every major Lutheran confession.

Rev. C•D•F• Warrington, M.Div.

By Rev. C•D•F• Warrington, M.Div.

Ordained Minister, M.Div.

Date

March 28, 2026